Providing Plastic Zone Extrusion

ABSTRACT

Plastic zone extrusion may be provided. First, stock may be placed in a chamber. Then frictional heat may be generated within the stock to heat the stock to a plastic zone of the stock in the chamber. The stock may then be extruded through an orifice in the chamber after the stock is at the plastic zone.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present application claims priority to U.S. Provisional ApplicationNo. 61/362,726 filed on Jul. 9, 2010, which is hereby incorporated byreference in its entirety.

COPYRIGHTS

All rights, including copyrights, in the material included herein arevested in and the property of the Applicant. The Applicant retains andreserves all rights in the material included herein, and grantspermission to reproduce the material only in connection withreproduction of the granted patent and for no other purpose.

BACKGROUND

Extrusion is a process used to create objects of a fixed cross-sectionalprofile. A material is pushed or drawn through a die of a desiredcross-section. Because a material only encounters compressive and shearstresses, extrusion provides the ability to create objects havingcomplex cross-sections.

SUMMARY

This Summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts in asimplified form that are further described below in the DetailedDescription. This Summary is not intended to identify key features oressential features of the claimed subject matter. Nor is this Summaryintended to be used to limit the claimed subject matter's scope.

Plastic zone extrusion may be provided. First, stock may be placed in achamber. Then frictional heat may be generated within the stock to heatthe stock to a plastic zone of the stock in the chamber. The stock maythen be extruded through an orifice in the chamber after the stock is atthe plastic zone.

Both the foregoing general description and the following detaileddescription provide examples and are explanatory only. Accordingly, theforegoing general description and the following detailed descriptionshould not be considered to be restrictive. Further, features orvariations may be provided in addition to those set forth herein. Forexample, embodiments may be directed to various feature combinations andsub-combinations described in the detailed description.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute apart of this disclosure, illustrate various embodiments of the presentinvention. In the drawings:

FIG. 1 shows an extrusion system;

FIG. 2 shows a friction extrusion system;

FIG. 3 shows a wire produced from machining chips;

FIG. 4 shows a dispersed discontinuous SiC particulate in aluminum 2618alloy matrix;

FIG. 5 show a friction stir process;

FIG. 6 shows a cross-section view of FSP zone;

FIG. 7 shows a uniform dispersion of nano Al₂O₃ particles in a pure Almatrix by FSP;

FIG. 8 shows stages involved in making comparable final products fromrecyclable scraps for embodiments of the invention and the currenttechnology involving melting, casting and rolling/extrusion;

FIG. 9 shows an example of final products manufactured via extrusionprocesses consistent with embodiments of the invention; and

FIG. 10 shows energy consumption for producing one million metric tonsof products.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The following detailed description refers to the accompanying drawings.Wherever possible, the same reference numbers are used in the drawingsand the following description to refer to the same or similar elements.While embodiments of the invention may be described, modifications,adaptations, and other implementations are possible. For example,substitutions, additions, or modifications may be made to the elementsillustrated in the drawings, and the methods described herein may bemodified by substituting, reordering, or adding stages to the disclosedmethods. Accordingly, the following detailed description does not limitthe invention.

For the U.S. domestic metal producers (steels, Al alloys, Ti alloys, forexample), recycling scraped materials is of prominent importance for anumber of reasons. First, there are great concerns on the environmentalissues related to disposing the scraped metals as industrial wastes.There is also an issue of diminishing domestic natural mineralresources, in contrast to the abundance and continuing pileups ofscraped metals produced over the years of industrialization. The primarydriver may be in the economics. It may be far cheaper, faster, and moreenergy-efficient to recycle than to manufacture from ores. In addition,capital equipment costs may be low for recycling. For example, recyclingaluminum may require only about 10% of the capital equipment costs ofthese for production from ore. Mini steel mills with EAF furnaces thatmainly use scraps as feedstock may also be less expensive to constructthan the large BOF based integrated mills.

The U.S. Department of Energy's Industrial Technology Program (ITP)conducted a series of studies looking into the energy consumptions inthe most energy-intensive industry sectors. For both steel industry andaluminum industry—the two largest metal making industries in theU.S.—converting scraps into usable products have become the major sourceof production.

Since the 1960's, recycling aluminum scraps in the U.S. has steadilygrown, both in terms of the tonnage, and the percentage of totalproduction. In 2000, nearly half (48.5%) of the aluminum metal producedin the U.S. was from recycled material. Similar trend exists insteelmaking. Steel has become the most recycled material, with two-thirdof U.S. steel now produced from scrap. Over ten million cars areshredded annually and the shredder scrap from these cars is returned tothe melt shops.

Melting the feedstock may be a major energy efficiency barrier in metalrecycling. In general, melting and melt processing operations may be themost energy intense of all post-smelting processes. Thermal energy maybe used to heat the scrap from ambient temperature to well above themelting point. A considerable portion of the thermal energy may beconsumed to overcome the latent heat of fusion associated with melting.The thermal efficiency of today's melting process may be also low. Forsteel, the best-practice energy usage of EAF steelmaking using 100%scrap charge is about 6.7 MBtu/cast ton, about five times of thetheoretical minimum energy. For aluminum, the ratio is 2.50 kWh/kg to0.33 kWh/kg—the actual usage is about 7.6 times of the theoreticalminimum value.

Recycling of scrap materials has become a major source and will play aneven more important role in future production and manufacturing ofindustrial metals in the U.S. The shift to a recycling dominantmetal-making market represents a fundamental change in the feedstockmaterials in the US. This shift also presents a window-of-opportunity tore-think how metals should be produced from recyclables with evengreater energy efficiency, environmental benefits, and product quality.

FIG. 1 shows a plastic zone extrusion system 100 consistent withembodiments of the invention for providing plastic zone extrusion. Asshown in FIG. 1, plastic zone extrusion system 100 may include an inlet105, a plunger 110, and an orifice 115. Consistent with embodiments onthe invention, stock may be placed in inlet 105. Once plastic zoneextrusion system 100 receives the stock, plunger 110 may compress thestock and force (e.g., extrude) the stock through orifice 115 in theform of a wire. For example, plunger 110 may turn the stock thusgenerating frictional heat. The generated frictional heat may heat thestock to a “plastic zone” of the stock. The plastic zone may comprise asolid state in which the stock is malleable, but not hot enough to be ina liquid or molten state. In other words, plastic zone extrusion system100 may include a rotating die configured to generate heat by rotatingthe stock within plastic zone extrusion system 100. Once the generatedheat places the stock in the stock's plastic zone, the stock may beextruded out orifice 115. The process may be continuously repeated bycontinuously adding stock into inlet 105 and continuously extruding wireout orifice 115 to construct a wire of any length.

The stock may comprise any material that may be placed in the stock'splastic zone by plastic zone extrusion system 100. For example, thestock may comprise aluminum, copper, or a combination. The stock, forexample, may comprise shavings or swarf. Swarf may comprise metalshavings or chippings, for example, debris or waste resulting frommetalworking operations. Swarf may be recycled, for example, due to theenvironmental concerns regarding potential contamination with liquidssuch as cutting fluid or tramp oil. These liquids may be separated fromthe metal using a centrifuge, thus allowing both to be reclaimed andprepared for further treatment.

Moreover, consistent with embodiments of the invention, the stock maycomprise one metal, a plurality of any metals, or a combination of ametal or metals with another non-metal substance or substances. Forexample, the stock may comprise both copper and aluminum. Withconventional systems, there may be a limit to the amount of moltencopper that can mix homogeneously with molten aluminum. Consistent withembodiments of the present invention, the stock may include copper andaluminum in any percentage. Consequently, a wire may be constructedbalancing aluminum's strength and light weigh with copper'sconductivity. In other words, copper may be added to aluminum stock toincrease the stocks conductivity.

The stock may also comprise any recycled or recyclable substance such asshredded aluminum cans. With conventional systems, recycled material,such as aluminum cans, must go through a “de-lacquering” process toremove substances from the recycled material. Consistent withembodiments of the invention, wire may be constructed using shreddedaluminum cans that have not been de-lacquered thus avoiding costsassociated with de-lacquering. While such wire may not have as highconductivity as stock that has been de-lacquered, this wire may be usedin situations in which this is not an issue (e.g. fence wire).

Furthermore, consistent with embodiments of the invention,nano-particles may be added to the stock. For example, nano-particles ofaluminum oxide may be added to aluminum stock to increase strength andconductivity of wire made with this stock. Notwithstanding, addednano-particles may add to the strength, conductivity, thermal expansion,or any physical or chemical property of wire made from stock withnano-particles added. With conventional systems, because material usedto make wire has to be heated at least until it melts, anynano-particles added in conventional systems my not be stable (e.g. maylose their desired properties) at the temperature of molten metals.

A highly energy-efficient solid-state material synthesis process—adirect solid-state metal conversion (DSSMC) technology may be provided.Specifically, nano-particle dispersion strengthened bulk materials maybe provided. Nano-composite materials from powders, chips, or otherrecyclable feedstock metals or scraps through mechanical alloying andthermo-mechanical processing may be provided in a single-step. Producingnano-engineered bulk materials with unique functional properties (e.g.thermal or electrical) may also be provided. Nano-engineered wires maybe used in long-distance electric power delivery infrastructure.

Embodiments of the present invention may comprise a DSSMC system andmethod. These systems and methods may eliminate the need of melting (themost energy extensive step) during scrap-to-metal conversion/recyclingprocess, thereby reducing the energy consumption and the cost of themetal making. Furthermore, since melting and solidification may beavoided, embodiments of the invention may open new pathways towardproducing new classes of materials such as nano-engineered structuraland functional materials by using, for example, mechanical alloying andprocessing. Embodiments of the present invention may use frictionextrusion of metal recycling and friction stir processing ofnano-particle strengthened surfaces.

Friction Extrusion

Friction extrusion may be a direct solid-state metal conversion process.Friction extrusion is shown in FIG. 2. A rotating chamber 205 filledwith swarf 210 (e.g., machining chips or metallic powder) may be appliedunder axial load 215 onto a plunger 220 and extruded. Located betweenplunger 220 and swarf 210 may be a fusible plug 240. In addition,plunger 220 may include an orifice or die 245. The frictional heat andpressure caused by the relative motion and the initial restriction inthe axial extrusion flow allow a plasticized layer 225 to form withoutthe need for an external heat source. Considerable heat is generated bythe high-strain rate plastic deformation in this layer that softens thematerial for mixing and consolidation. A relatively localized heataffected transition zone 230 may separate the plasticized layer from thecompressed swaft 210 that may remain stagnant within chamber 205. Withcontinued generation of plasticized layer 225 and progressiveconsumption of the swarf 210, a solid rod 235 may be hydrostaticallyextruded through die 245. From the energy consumption point of view,because considerable temperature rise may be restricted to thinplasticized layer 225, heat loss to the environment may be considerablylower than the heat loss of a heating furnace.

As shown in FIG. 3, a solid Al-Mg alloy wire 305 of over 3 mm indiameter and several meters long may be produced from, for example,machining chips 310. Good mechanical properties and greater than 99.8%densification (as measurement by density) may be achieved. Simple handbend tests through 180° and tensile tests may demonstrate the integrityof the finished rod. Tensile test may achieve 130 MPa.

Consistent with embodiments of the invention, the extensivethermo-mechanical deformation may be to produce mechanically alloyedmaterials. Aluminum powder 2618 and 40% micron-sized silicon carbidesmay be used as the feedstock. Consistent with embodiments of theinvention, most processed materials may be produced with reasonableappearance, consequently at least partial consolidation and conversionof the feedstock materials may be achieved. FIG. 4 shows thelongitudinal section of a metal matrix composite bar made in trial runs.The dispersed discontinuous SiC particulates may be uniformeddistributed in the aluminum 2618 alloy matrix.

Consistent with embodiments of the invention, the product from thefriction extrusion may be a round wire/bar. However, other forms orshapes of products could be made through use of different die andplunger designs. Also, there may be no barrier limiting the size of thefinal products, if the process consistent with embodiments of theinvention is scale up, for example, through additional hotextrusion/forming/rolling of the billet produced from multiple frictionextrusion stations.

Friction Stir Processing

Consistent with embodiments of the invention, friction stir processing(FSP) may incorporate nano-sized oxide particles into Al matrix to forma mechanically alloyed hard and strong nanocomposite surface layer. FSPmay comprise a variant of friction stir welding. In FSP (e.g., FIG. 5),a rotating tool 505 may be pushed against a workpiece 510 beingprocessed such that a pin 515 of rotating tool 505 is buried inworkpiece 510 and tool shoulder 525 is in full contact with a surface520 of the workpiece. During processing, the temperature in a column ofworkpiece material under a tool shoulder 525 may be increasedsubstantially, but below the melting point of the material, largely dueto the frictional heating and high-strain rate deformation at theinterface of the rotating tool 505 and workpiece 510. The increase intemperature may soften the material and allow the rotating tool 505 tomechanically stir the softened material toward the backside of pin 515for consolidation and mechanical alloying. The high straining rate andthe extensive material flow/deformation of FSP, which are not easilyachievable in other thermo-mechanical deformation processes, may resultin microstructures with unique or drastically improved properties.

Consistent with embodiments of the invention, up to 20% volume fractionof nano-sized Al₂O₃ particles may be uniformly dispersed andmechanically alloyed with the Al matrix to form a nano-compositematerial with greatly increased strength. The Al—Al₂O₃ nano-compositemay have over an order of magnitude higher compressive strength thanthat of baseline comparison metal. The wear resistance may be severalorders of magnitude higher. FIG. 6 shows the cross-section of thefriction stir processed Al—Al₂O₃ nano-composite surface layer, and theresulting uniform distribution of the nano oxide particles. FSP may havea surface modification technology not intended for bulk nano-materialproduction. Consistent with embodiments of the invention, a high volumefraction of nano particles may be uniformly incorporated into bulk metalmatrix by extensive thermo-mechanical deformation and mixing fromfriction stir action.

FIG. 7 shows a uniform dispersion of nano Al₂O₃ particles in pure Almatrix by FSP. The initial oxide particle size in FIG. 7 isapproximately 50 nm.

Embodiments of the invention may provide a direct solid-state metalconversion process that includes: (1) metal recycling with greatlyimproved energy efficiency; and (2) synthesis of nano-engineered bulkmaterials with enhanced mechanical strength and other unique functionalproperties.

DSSMC consistent with embodiments of the invention may provide highenergy efficiency including an over 80% energy reductions in DSSMC overconventional metal conversion/synthesis processes that involve metalmelting. Actual energy savings in production could be even higher, dueto, for example, the energy efficiency of the mechanical system over thethermal/melting system. DSSMC may be environmentally friendly due torecycling scraps and low energy consumption.

Since melting and solidification may be eliminated, DSSMC may besuitable for synthesis of high-performance structural materials andfunctional materials that relies on mechanical alloying principles.DSSMC may produce lightweight metal matrix composites for transportationsystems, nano-engineered (nano-composite, and/or nano-crystalline) bulkmaterials for electricity infrastructure, and oxide dispersionstrengthened (ODS) alloys for nuclear energy systems. It may also beused in the low-cost Ti process, as well as Ti based composite materialssuch as TiAl intermetallics and/or SiC-reinforced Ti alloys.

DSSMC may be a continuous process that may be much easier to scale-upfor high-volume production of bulk nano-engineered materials, incomparison with the powder metallurgic (PM)+hot isostatic pressing (HIP)and other mechanically alloying or nano material synthesis processes.

-   -   DSSMC may not be limited to wires or rods. Other shapes may be        produced with proper design of the die and related process        conditions.    -   DSSMC may be deployed as a metal recycling process with much        lower energy consumption, operational cost and equipment cost.    -   The relevance and significance of DSSMC as a bulk nano-material        synthesis technology is discussed further below.

Consistent with embodiments of the invention, engineering materialsstrengthened with nano-sized oxides and other ceramic particulatedispersoids may have some unique properties. For the same volumefraction, nano-sized particles may be much more effective thanmicron-sized particles in strengthening the material due to reducedinter-particle spacing and the Orowan hardening effect. Because theoxides and ceramic particles may be thermally stable and insoluble inthe matrix, dispersion strengthened materials may retain their strengthup to temperatures near the matrix melting point. Further, dispersionstrengthening may not have the same limitation of precipitationstrengthening that requires high solubility of solute atoms at hightemperatures and specific nano phase forming thermodynamics andkinetics. Therefore, dispersion strengthening may lessen thecompositional restrictions in alloy design—an important aspect in metalrecycling as it may ease the requirement for metal sorting.

Dispersion strengthened materials may be produced in small quantitythrough mechanical-alloying power-metallurgy route that may be involvedin HIP and multi-step hot rolling and annealing. Examples may includeoxide dispersion strengthened (ODS) ferrous and non-ferrous alloysintended for next generation nuclear reactors and ultra high-temperatureboiler applications. However, the PM+HIP process may be highly energyintensive and very costly to scale-up. Nano ceramic dispersion particlesmay be added to cast Al alloys and Mg alloys with considerableimprovement in mechanical properties, especially high-temperature creepstrength.

Although casting can produce large quantity of bulk materials, achievinguniform dispersion of nano-sized particles in the molten metal andsubsequent solidified metal matrix may be difficult. Due to the lowdensity and the van der Waals force effect, the nano-sized oxideparticles may tend to agglomerate and float to the surface during metalcasting. Attempts to apply external energy field such as ultrasonicenergy to breakdown the agglomerates and mix the nano-particlesuniformly in the molten metal have been experimented in laboratory withlimited success.

DSSMC consistent with embodiments of the invention may provide anapproach to produce nano-engineered materials. Uniform dispersion may beprovided with much higher volume fraction (up to 20%) of nano-particlesin a metal matrix. Friction extrusion shares the same deformation andmetallurgical bonding principles with FSP and other widely used frictionbased solid-state joining processes. They all may rely on frictionalheating and extreme thermo-mechanical process deformation to stir, mix,mechanically alloy, and metallurgically consolidate and synthesize thematerial together. Friction extrusion may offer a practical means toproduce bulk materials utilizing the principle of friction stirconsolidation.

Embodiments of the invention may provide:

-   -   Different shaped products.    -   Nano-engineered bulk materials (solid wires) via DSSMC.    -   Co-recycling different types of Al alloys (such as 5xxx series        with 6xxx series).

Although DSSMC may recycle and convert a variety of industrial metals,the analysis in this section will be limited to two type of metals:aluminum alloys and steels for which the widespread applications of thetransformational DSSMC technology is expected to have highest energy,economic, environmental impacts. DSSMC may be applied to steel productsespecially on tool materials used for the dies and the plungers.

The analysis on the energy, economic, and environmental impacts from theapplication of the DSSMC technology may be divided into two parts. Thefirst part describes the procedure, references and assumptions used inthe analysis. The second part summarizes the analysis results.

FIG. 8 shows the comparison of the basic operation steps of the currenttechnologies and the new technologies for converting scraps to nearnet-shape products.

Current Baseline Technology

Secondary aluminum production—aluminum produced entirely from recycledaluminum scrap—is an example of as the current baseline technology (e.g.conventional.) Secondary aluminum production may comprise a number ofmajor operations. The scraps are first melted in a furnace, cast intolarge ingot, billets, T-bar, slab or strip, and finally rolled, extrudedor otherwise formed into the components and useful products. Thesecondary aluminum industry is a large market—currently, over 50% of thedomestically produced Al products are made from aluminum scraps.

A mini steel mill may comprise a conventional system for steelproduction. The mini steel mill may comprise an electric arc furnace,billet continuous caster and rolling mill capable of making longproducts (bars, rod, sections, etc). The mini steel mill takes 100%scrap charge and makes bar and rod stocks as the final product.Therefore, both the input and output are the same in the directconversion and the mini-mill steel converting processes.

The DSSMC process consistent with embodiments of the invention mayproduce near net-shape products from recyclable scraps in a single step,for the products described above by the current baseline technologies.

FIG. 8 shows steps involved in making comparable final products 805 fromrecyclable scraps 810 for embodiments of the invention 815 and thecurrent technology 820. Current technology 820 may comprise a furnace825 to melt recyclable scraps 810. The melted recyclable scraps may becast 830 into ingots. The ingots then may be formed into the finalproducts 805 via rolling 835 or extrusion 840.

FIG. 9 shows an example of final products 805. Embodiments of theinvention may be used to extrude complex objects. For example, FIG. 9shows a cylindrical bar 905 having a first internal rod 910, a secondinternal rod 915, a third internal rod 920, and a fourth internal rod925. During manufacturing, multiple chambers may be filled with swarfand multiple dies may be used to form cylindrical bar 905, firstinternal rod 910, second internal rod 915, third internal rod 920, andfourth internal rod 925. For instance, a first chamber may be filledwith swarf and have a first die capable of extruding first internal rod910, second internal rod 915, third internal rod 920, and fourthinternal rod 925. A second chamber may be filled with swart, either ofthe same metal/alloy, or a different metal/alloy, and have a second diecapable of extruding cylindrical bar 905. Consistent with embodiments ofthe invention, during a single extrusion both cylindrical bar 905 andfirst internal rod 910, second internal rod 915, third internal rod 920,and fourth internal rod 925 may be formed.

OPERATIONAL EXAMPLE Analysis Procedure

Energy analysis may comprise two major steps. The first step maycomprise determining the unit energy consumption for both the currentbaseline technology (conventional) and embodiments consistent with theinvention. This included determination of the theoretical minimum energyrequirements for both current and embodiments consistent with theinvention, the actual average energy usage by U.S. industry for thecurrent baseline technology, and the estimated energy usage forembodiments consistent with the invention. To ensure proper energy andenvironmental calculations, the “process energy”—the energy used at aprocess facility (the onsite energy)—may be determined. It does notinclude the energy losses incurred at offsite utilities (such as powergeneration and transmission loss).

In the second step, appropriate U.S. domestic Al and steel productionfigures may be obtained from available market survey. The unit energyusage data from the first step, together with the statistic annualproduction data from the second step, may be used as input to, forexample, Energy Savings Calculation Tool (GPRA2004 Excel spreadsheet)from DOE ITP to determine the overall energy, economic and environmentalbenefits of the new technology.

Unit Energy Consumption Comparison Energy Usage of Current Baseline(Conventional) Technology

The energy usage of the current baseline technology can be found fromDOE reports. In general, a variety of fuels are used in different stagesof Al or steel making. Choate and Green's study provides a detailedaccount of the energy used in aluminum recycling. According to thisstudy, the energy usage for making final near net-shape product is:

$\frac{{Total}\mspace{14mu} {Energy}}{{kg}\mspace{14mu} {AL}} = {{IngotCasting} + \frac{\left( {{2.75*{Hot}\mspace{14mu} {Rolling}} + {2.75*{Cold}\mspace{14mu} {Rolling}} + {1.72*{Extrusion}}} \right)}{6.72}}$

In this equation, it is assumed that percentages of ingots used forrolling and extrusion are proportional to the annual rolling andextrusion production rates: 2.75 million metric tons for hot rolling,2.75 million metric tons for cold rolling, and 1.72 million metric tonsfor extrusion. The actual energy consumptions for steel recycling (EAFfurnaces in mini steel mills) are estimated in the similar fashionaccording to the study by Stubbles.

The average actual unit energy consumption figures are presented inTable 1, together with the theoretical minimum energy requirement forboth current (conventional) and new technology (embodiments of theinvention), and estimated energy usage for embodiments of the presentinvention. The theoretical minimum energy requirements were obtainedfrom Choate and Green for aluminum, and Fruehan's study for steel.

Energy Usage that May Be Used by Embodiments of the Invention

The unit energy consumption of embodiments of the invention, forexample, is estimated below. In DSSMC process, friction may be used todrive the localized deformation and heating. Both the frictional heatingand high-strain rate plastic deformation result in an increase intemperature of the processed region. Therefore, the energy input can beestimated from the temperature increase in the processing region. Theminimum theoretical energy may be determined from adiabatic heating byplastic work:

Δ H = ∫_(T₂)C_(P) T

where C_(p) is the specific heat capacity of the material processed, andT₂ is the processing temperature. The processing temperature is assumedto be 450° C. for aluminum alloys and 1300° C. for steels, based on thetypical hot forging temperatures of the materials. The average specificheat is 0.9 and 0.45 respectively for Al and Fe.

The energy efficiency of the new technology is assumed to be 50%. Thisfigure is based on the fact that the new technology is primarily amechanical deformation process. According to Choate and Green, theefficiency of electrical/hydraulic system for rolling and extrusion is75%. A lower efficiency may be assumed to account for other uncountedenergy loses of the new technology.

Energy Reduction on Unit Product Basis

FIG. 10 shows the comparison of the energy consumption for producing onemillion metric tons of products using embodiments of the presentinvention and the current baseline technology. The energy usage wasbroken down according to the type of fuels used in the current Al andsteel making (from 100% scraps), as different types of fuels havedifferent environmental impact (such as CO2 emission). It may be assumedthat the DSSMC process is an electric/hydraulic driven mechanical systemthat uses 100% electricity.

As shown in FIG. 10, the new technology (i.e., embodiments of thepresent invention) has enormous energy saving potential. The reductionof the theoretical minimum energy usage is 85% and 51%, respectively forAl alloys and steels. Because of the energy inefficiencies of thecurrent (i.e., conventional) technology, the estimated reductions of theactual energy usage are over 90% for aluminum and about 80% for steels.Similar energy savings may be achieved with the solid-state frictionstir welding process.

While certain embodiments of the invention have been described, otherembodiments may exist. Further, the disclosed methods' stages may bemodified in any manner, including by reordering stages and/or insertingor deleting stages, without departing from the invention. While thespecification includes examples, the invention's scope is indicated bythe following claims. Furthermore, while the specification has beendescribed in language specific to structural features and/ormethodological acts, the claims are not limited to the features or actsdescribed above. Rather, the specific features and acts described aboveare disclosed as example for embodiments of the invention.

1. A method for providing plastic zone extrusion, the method comprising:placing stock into a chamber; generating frictional heat within thestock to heat the stock to a plastic zone of the stock in the chamber;and extruding, through an orifice in the chamber, the stock after thestock is at the plastic zone.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein placingstock into the chamber comprises placing swarf into the chamber.
 3. Themethod of claim 1, wherein placing stock into the chamber comprisesplacing nano-particles into the chamber.
 4. The method of claim 3,wherein the nano-particles comprise at least one of the following:aluminum oxide, silicon carbide, copper, and carbon nano-tubes.
 5. Themethod of claim 1, wherein generating the frictional heat within thestock comprises: rotating the orifice; and applying pressure to thestock.
 6. The method of claim 1, wherein generating the frictional heatwithin the stock comprises creating a plasticized layer within thestock, the plasticized layer adjacent the orifice.
 7. A system ofextruding a material, the system comprising: a chamber defining a volumeconfigured to contain stock and having an orifice; a plunger sized topenetrate and mateably communicate within the chamber; and a motoroperative to rotate at least one of the chamber and the plunger.
 8. Thesystem of claim 7, wherein the chamber further comprises a die, whereinthe motor is operative to rotate only the chamber and the die.
 9. Thesystem of claim 7, wherein the plunger further comprises a die, whereinthe motor is operative to rotate only the plunge and the die.
 10. Thesystem of claim 7, further comprising a fusible plug located between theplunger and the stock contained in the chamber.
 11. The system of claim7, wherein the stock contained in the chamber comprises swarf.
 12. Thesystem of claim 7, wherein the stock contained in the chamber comprisesnano-particles.
 13. The system of claim 12, wherein the nano-particlescomprises at least one of the following: aluminum oxide, siliconcarbide, copper, and carbon nano-tubes.
 14. A method for providingfriction stir, the method comprising: softening material at a surface ofa workpiece; and mechanically stirring the softened material to cause atleast one of the following: consolidation and mechanical alloying. 15.The method of claim 14, wherein softening the material at the surface ofthe workpiece comprising pushing a rotating tool against the workpiece.16. The method of claim 15, wherein pushing the rotating tool againstthe workpiece comprises: penetrating the workpiece with a pin; andpushing a shoulder against the workpiece, the rotating tool comprisingthe shoulder and the pin protruding from the shoulder.
 17. The method ofclaim 14, further comprising: applying nano-particles to the surface;dispersing the nano-particles over a portion of the surface; andmechanically alloying the nano-particles with a matrix of the softenedmaterial.
 18. The method of claim 17, wherein dispersing thenano-particles over the portion of the surface comprises dispersing upto 20% volume fraction of nano-particles over the portion of thesurface.
 19. The method of claim 18, wherein the nano-particles comprisean Al-Al₂O₃ nano-composite.